1,886 research outputs found
Magnetic tomography for lead acid batteries
© 2017 The AuthorsThis paper explores the inverse problem approach for finding the current distribution within an electrochemical cell from magnetic field measurements. Current distribution is shown to be a useful measurement for diagnosis of cells and development of cell design. Existing current distribution measurement methods are discussed to provide context and motivation for the work. Magnetic field measurements can be obtained non-invasively and contain information about the current distribution, which is extracted using an appropriate solver. Experimental results are presented which test the effectiveness of a particular inverse problem solver, using both simulated and real magnetic field measurements. The solver presented is based upon one found in literature, but with novel problem-specific modifications. Errors in conductance values in the forward model definition are simulated in order to quantify their effect on solution quality. A modification to the solver is proposed to improve robustness against these model errors. This results in improved solution quality when using real measured data from a resistor-wire model of a cell, and simulated data from a model which more accurately represents the conductance of the cell plate grid and active mass
Eksperimentalna infektivna pneumokonioza
Quartz and coal-mine dusts were introduced into the lungs of rats by inhalation, in a high concentration, for four months, and then groups of these dusted animals were infected with a virulent strain of human tubercle bacillus (37 Rv). Dusting was continued for a further period of ten months in the case of coal-mine dust. No variation in lung pathology was seen in the quartz groups, although both produced classical silicotic nodules. In the coal-mine dust the infective group showed slightly more fibrosis, diffuse in nature, than either the noninfected or the tuberculous control group. These are preliminary experiments, and the results must be considered as both tentative and not very conclusive. Work is being continued.Prašina kvarca i ugljenokopna prašina bile su unesene inhalacijom u pluća štakora. Koncentracija je bila visoka, a ekspozicija je trajala 4 mjeseca Nakon toga su grupe zaprašenih životinja bile inficirane virulentnim sojom humanog tuberkuloznog bacila (H 37 Rv). Kod grupe životinja, koje su bile izvrgnute djelovanju ugljenokopne prašine, nastavljeno je zaprašivanje daljih 10 mjeseci. U kvarcnim grupama nije bilo razlike s obzirom na patologiju pluća, iako je u obje grupe došlo do stvaranja klasičnih silikotičnih čvorova. U grupi životinja, koje su bile izvrgnute ugljenokopnoj prašini, nađeno je nešto više fibroze, koja je bila difuzna, nego bilo u neinficiranoj ili tuberkuloznoj kontrolnoj grupi. Ti eksperimenti su preliminarni i ne treba ih smatrati previše konkluzivnima. Rad se nastavlja
Modelling the seasonality of Lyme disease risk and the potential impacts of a warming climate within the heterogeneous landscapes of Scotland
Lyme disease is the most prevalent vector-borne disease in the temperate Northern Hemisphere. The abundance of infected nymphal ticks is commonly used as a Lyme disease risk indicator. Temperature can influence the dynamics
of disease by shaping the activity and development of ticks and, hence, altering the contact pattern and pathogen transmission between ticks and their host animals. A mechanistic, agent-based model was developed to study the temperature-driven seasonality of Ixodes ricinus ticks and transmission of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato across mainland Scotland. Based on 12-year averaged temperature surfaces, our model predicted that Lyme disease risk currently peaks in autumn, approximately six weeks after the temperature peak. The risk was predicted to decrease with increasing altitude. Increases in temperature were predicted to prolong the duration of the tick questing season and expand the risk area to higher altitudinal and latitudinal regions. These predicted impacts on tick population ecology may be expected to lead to greater tick–host contacts under climate warming and, hence, greater risks of pathogen transmission. The model is useful in improving understanding of the spatial determinants and system mechanisms of Lyme disease pathogen transmission and its sensitivity to temperature changes
Population and age structure in Hungary: a residential preference and age dependency approach to disaggregate census data
We present a simple model to disaggregate age structured population census data to a 1-km grid for Hungary. A dasymetric approach was used to predict the spatial distribution of population in different age groups by distinguishing residential preferences (in relation to accessible social, economic and green amenities) for working age groups (15–29, 30–49 and 50–64) and population dependencies for children and the elderly (aged 0–14 and 65+). By using open-access land cover data and fine-level population census data as inputs, the model predicts the likely spatial distribution of population and age structure for Hungary in 2011. The resulting map and gridded data provide information to support spatial planning of residential development and urban infrastructure. The model is less data-demanding than most existing approaches, but provides greater power for describing population patterns. It can also be used to create scenarios of future demographic change
Modelling regional cropping patterns under scenarios of climate and socio-economic change in Hungary
Impacts of socio-economic, political and climatic change on agricultural land systems are inherently uncertain. The role of regional and local-level actors is critical in developing effective policy responses that accommodate such uncertainty in a flexible and informed way across governance levels. This study identified potential regional challenges in arable land use systems, which may arise from climate and socio-economic change for two counties in western Hungary: Veszprém and Tolna. An empirically-grounded, agent-based model was developed from an extensive farmer household survey about local land use practices. The model was used to project future patterns of arable land use under four localised, stakeholder-driven scenarios of plausible future socio-economic and climate change. The results show strong differences in farmers' behaviour and current agricultural land use patterns between the two regions, highlighting the need to implement focused policy at the regional level. For instance, policy that encourages local food security may need to support improvements in the capacity of farmers to adapt to physical constraints in Veszprém and farmer access to social capital and environmental awareness in Tolna. It is further suggested that the two regions will experience different challenges to adaptation under possible future conditions (up to 2100). For example, Veszprém was projected to have increased fallow land under a scenario with high inequality, ineffective institutions and higher-end climate change, implying risks of land abandonment. By contrast, Tolna was projected to have a considerable decline in major cereals under a scenario assuming a de-globalising future with moderate climate change, inferring challenges to local food self-sufficiency. The study provides insight into how socio-economic and physical factors influence the selection of crop rotation plans by farmers in western Hungary and how farmer behaviour may affect future risks to agricultural land systems under environmental change
Semantic categories underlying the meaning of ‘place’
This paper analyses the semantics of natural language expressions that are associated with the intuitive notion of ‘place’. We note that the nature of such terms is highly contested, and suggest that this arises from two main considerations: 1) there are a number of logically
distinct categories of place expression, which are not always clearly distinguished in discourse about ‘place’; 2) the many non-substantive place count nouns (such as ‘place’, ‘region’, ‘area’, etc.) employed in natural
language are highly ambiguous. With respect to consideration 1), we propose that place-related expressions
should be classified into the following distinct logical types: a) ‘place-like’ count nouns (further subdivided into abstract, spatial and substantive varieties), b) proper names of ‘place-like’ objects, c) locative property phrases, and d) definite descriptions of ‘place-like’ objects. We outline possible formal representations for each of these. To address consideration 2), we examine meanings, connotations and ambiguities of the English vocabulary of abstract and generic place count nouns, and identify underlying elements of meaning, which explain both
similarities and differences in the sense and usage of the various terms
Risk-adjusted survival for adults following in-hospital cardiac arrest by day of week and time of day: Observational cohort study
Background: Internationally, hospital survival is lower for patients admitted at weekends and at night. Data from the UK National Cardiac Arrest Audit (NCAA) indicate that crude hospital survival was worse after in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) at night versus day, and at weekends versus weekdays, despite similar frequency of events. Objective: To describe IHCA demographics during three day/time periods - weekday daytime (Monday to Friday, 08:00 to 19:59), weekend daytime (Saturday and Sunday, 08:00 to 19:59) and night-time (Monday to Sunday, 20:00 to 07:59) - and to compare the associated rates of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) for >20 min (ROSC>20 min) and survival to hospital discharge, adjusted for risk using previously developed NCAA risk models. To consider whether any observed difference could be attributed to differences in the case mix of patients resident in hospital and/or the administered care. Methods: We performed a prospectively defined analysis of NCAA data from 27 700 patients aged ≥16 years receiving chest compressions and/or defibrillation and attended by a hospital-based resuscitation team in response to a resuscitation (2222) call in 146 UK acute hospitals. Results: Risk-adjusted outcomes (OR (95% CI)) were worse (p20 min 0.88 (0.81 to 0.95); hospital survival 0.72 (0.64 to 0.80)), and nighttime (ROSC>20 min 0.72 (0.68 to 0.76); hospital survival 0.58 (0.54 to 0.63)) compared with weekday daytime. The effects were stronger for non-shockable than shockable rhythms, but there was no significant interaction between day/ time of arrest and age, or day/time of arrest and arrest location. While many daytime IHCAs involved procedures, restricting the analyses to IHCAs in medical admissions with an arrest location of ward produced results that are broadly in line with the primary analyses. Conclusions: IHCAs attended by the hospital-based resuscitation team during nights and weekends have substantially worse outcomes than during weekday daytimes. Organisational or care differences at night and weekends, rather than patient case mix, appear to be responsible
Quantum oscillations in underdoped YBa_2Cu_3O_6.5
Shubnikov-de Haas and de Haas-van Alphen effects have been measured in the
underdoped high temperature superconductor YBaCuO. Data are in
agreement with the standard Lifshitz-Kosevitch theory, which confirms the
presence of a coherent Fermi surface in the ground state of underdoped
cuprates. A low frequency T is reported in both measurements,
pointing to small Fermi pocket, which corresponds to 2% of the first Brillouin
zone area only. This low value is in sharp contrast with that of overdoped
TlBaCuO, where a high frequency kT has been
recently reported and corresponds to a large hole cylinder in agreement with
band structure calculations. These results point to a radical change in the
topology of the Fermi surface on opposing sides of the cuprate phase diagram.Comment: proceeding of the ECRYS-200
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